Revision of fossil Bibionidae (Insecta: Diptera) from French Oligocene deposits
Author
Skartveit, John
Author
Nel, André
text
Zootaxa
2017
4225
1
1
83
journal article
37263
10.5281/zenodo.259087
05be601b-f9f1-4952-ac09-7012ef31aab0
1175-5326
259087
4676EE59-569B-4197-B108-9B32FD88E68E
Genus
Penthetria
Meigen, 1803
While it is straightforward to distinguish the genera
Penthetria
and
Plecia
in recent species, this is not always so with fossils. In the recent species, it is most convenient to identify the genera based on the shape of the vein R2+3, which is long and horizontal in
Penthetria
, short and steep in
Plecia
. However, in fossil species the shape of R2+3 (sometimes named R3+4) varies continuously (
Rice 1959
) and it is not possible to draw a non-arbitrary line between
Penthetria
and
Plecia
wing venation.
Handlirsch (1908)
chose to put all fossil bibionids with forked Radial sector in the genus
Penthetria
, this may be warranted given the limited information available on the morphology of most of the fossil species. However, some fossil species are quite typical of the genus
Plecia
.
In recent species, male terminalia in
Plecia
spp., though highly variable, is almost always decidedly different from the plesiomorphic pattern invariably found in
Penthetria
species. However, many fossil species that habitually conform to
Plecia
have plesiomorphic terminalia, with digitiform gonostyli which are attached distally on the gonapophysis and are directed mesally (
e.g
.,
Skartveit 2009
). Typical
Penthetria
males can still be recognized on the very robust, pilose, curved gonostyli, but this is apparent only in very well preserved fossils, whereas a large proportion of the named species have been described from females or poorly-preserved males. One often has to resort to general habitus to assign these species to genus since characters of the terminalia are not available.
Penthetria
species are generally larger (most species more than
10 mm
), more gracile with markedly longer legs, slender male abdomens, the wings are longer, slender in the males and notably large in the female, usually fumose.
Plecia
species are generally smaller (most species smaller than
10 mm
), more robust with shorter legs, male abdomen stockier, and shorter wings which are often hyaline.